Smartphone photography has come a long way, but there’s always been a tension between what these cameras can do and what serious photographers actually want from them. Most flagships rely on heavy computational processing that smooths, brightens, and sharpens images into something generically appealing. For photographers who value accuracy over flattery and real control over automated guesswork, the gap between phone cameras and dedicated hardware hasn’t entirely closed.
Sony’s Xperia lineup has always tried to bridge that gap, offering manual controls and ZEISS optics where others defaulted to automation. The Xperia 1 VIII continues that approach while adding an AI Camera Assistant that draws on the company’s Alpha mirrorless camera heritage. It doesn’t take over the shooting process; it reads the scene and offers Creative Look suggestions, which the photographer can accept or ignore entirely.
Designer: Sony


The most significant hardware change is the telephoto camera, now carrying a 48MP sensor measuring 1/1.56 inches, four times larger than the Xperia 1 VII’s. A bigger sensor catches more light, which translates to sharper, cleaner shots when zooming in at dusk or across a crowded room, the kind of situations where previous phone telephoto cameras would typically struggle.

Picture trying to photograph a performer on a dimly lit stage from the back of the venue. On most phones, that means noise, blur, and a lot of guessing about which lens to reach for. The AI Camera Assistant analyzes the scene in real time and recommends the right telephoto setting, a tone profile that suits the mood, and the ideal bokeh depth. You just compose and shoot.


Under the hood, the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 advertises a roughly 20% performance boost over the previous generation, helping the phone stay responsive under demanding workloads. Paired with up to 16GB of RAM, storage options reaching 1TB, and a rare microSD slot supporting up to 2TB more, there’s no shortage of headroom for anyone accumulating large RAW files and 4K video footage.

The 6.5-inch LTPO OLED display uses Sony’s BRAVIA processing alongside both front and rear ambient light sensors to calibrate color for wherever you happen to be. It’s a feature borrowed from Sony’s television lineup, and it makes a real difference when reviewing footage outdoors. The 3.5mm headphone jack stays, and a Walkman-tuned circuit design improves wired audio quality noticeably beyond what most flagships manage.


Battery life is rated at two days, backed by a 5,000 mAh cell and a Processing Optimization mode that dials back power use during intensive tasks like navigation. Sony also commits to four years of battery health, a meaningful promise for a device at this price. Charging maxes out at 30 W wired and 15W wireless, with three color options: Graphite Black, Iolite Silver, and Garnet Red.

At £1,399 in the UK (roughly US$1,890), the Xperia 1 VIII isn’t an impulse buy, and Sony isn’t pitching it as one. It’s built for people who shoot deliberately, edit with intention, and want a phone that keeps pace with that mindset rather than working against it. For those who fit that profile, there aren’t many phones currently offering this level of thoughtful integration across camera, display, and audio.
